The Protestant Ethnic and the Spirit of Capitalism

Beschreibung

Beschreibung

In late-capitalist Western society, cross-ethnic cultural transactions are an inevitable daily routine. Yet, according to acclaimed cultural critic Rey Chow, the notion of ethnicity as it is currently used is theoretically ambivalent, confusing, indeed self-contradictory, straddling as it does an uneasy boundary between a universalist rhetoric of inclusion on the one hand, and actual, lived experiences of violence and intolerance on the other. To drastically reconceptualize ethnicity in the contemporary world, Chow proposes that it be examined in conjunction with Max Weber's famous theory about the Protestant work ethic and capitalism, which holds that secular belief in salvation often collaborates effectively with the interpellation, disciplining, and rewarding of subjects constituted by specific forms of labor. The charged figure that results from such a collaboration, resonant with the economic, psychological, and spiritual implications of the word "protest, " is what she refers to as the protestant ethnic.Chow explores the vicissitudes of cross-ethnic representational politics in a diverse range of texts across multiple genres, including the writings of Georg Lukacs, Michel Foucault, Max Weber, Jacques Derrida, Fredric Jameson, Etienne Balibar, Charlotte Brontë, Garrett Hongo, John Yau, and Frantz Fanon; the films of Alfred Hitchcock, Marguerite Duras, and Alain Resnais; and the cartoon drawings of Larry Feign. Tracing out hauntingly familiar scenarios from stereotyping and coercive mimeticism to collective narcissistic abjection, the rise of white feminist racial power, and intraethnic ressentiment, Chow articulates a series of interlocking critical dialogues that challenge readers into hitherto unimagined ways of thinking about an urgent topic.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Introduction: From Biopower to Ethnic DifferenceChapter 1. The Protestant Ethnic and the Spirit of CapitalismChapter 2. Brushes with the-Other-as-Face: Stereotyping and Cross-Ethnic RepresentationChapter 3. Keeping Them in Their Place: Coercive Mimeticism and Cross-Ethnic RepresentationChapter 4. The Secrets of Ethnic AbjectionChapter 5. When Whiteness Feminizes... : Some Consequences of a Supplementary LogicPostscript: Beyond Ethnic "Ressentiment"?

Portrait

Rey Chow

Pressestimmen

"There is nothing consolatory...one is faced simply with the imperative to think harder and better about the problems that face back from the surface of the world." -- Eric Hayot, Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews